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This little palace belongs to the Schleißheim palace complex. It was built in 1684 for the wedding of Kurfürst Max Emanuel with the Austrian princess Maria Antonia.

 

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Flickr-users from the US will be familiar with those legendary commercials for BUD(WEISER) beer, some years ago.

Curious Germans who are wondering now what it is all about

can easily find endless clips on youtube...

 

Für die deutschen Fotofreunde:

In der englischsprachigen Welt assoziiert man mit "bud"

nicht nur eine Biermarke, sondern eben auch "Knospe".

["So sorry!" an alle, die gerade genervt aufgestöhnt haben...]

Taken with a Yashinon auto 55mm f1,8 lens from ca 1965

 

Aperture: f11

 

Soligor extension tubes

IMPORTANT: for non-pro users who read the info on a computer, just enlarge your screen to 120% (or more), then the full text will appear below the photo with a white background - which makes reading so much easier.

The color version of the photo above is here: www.lacerta-bilineata.com/ticino-best-photos-of-southern-...

 

THE STORY BEHIND THE PHOTO:

So far there's only been one photo in my gallery that hasn't been taken in my garden ('The Flame Rider', captured in the Maggia Valley: www.flickr.com/photos/191055893@N07/53563448847/in/datepo... ) - which makes the image above the second time I've "strayed from the path" (although not very far, since the photo was taken only approximately 500 meters from my house).

 

Overall, I'll stick to my "only-garden rule", but every once in a while I'll show you a little bit of the landscape around my village, because I think it will give you a better sense of just how fascinating this region is, and also of its history.

 

The title I chose for the photo may seem cheesy, and it's certainly not very original, but I couldn't think of another one, because it's an honest reflection of what I felt when I took it: a profound sense of peace - although if you make it to the end of this text you'll realize my relationship with that word is a bit more complicated.

 

I got up early that day; it was a beautiful spring morning, and there was still a bit of mist in the valley below my village which I hoped would make for a few nice mood shots, so I quickly grabbed my camera and went down there before the rising sun could dissolve the magical layer on the scenery.

 

Most human activity hadn't started yet, and I was engulfed in the sounds of the forest as I was walking the narrow trail along the horse pasture; it seemed every little creature around me wanted to make its presence known to potential mates (or rivals) in a myriad of sounds and voices and noises (in case you're interested, here's a taste of what I usually wake up to in spring, but you best use headphones: www.youtube.com/watch?v=AfoCTqdAVCE )

 

Strolling through such an idyllic landscape next to grazing horses and surrounded by birdsong and beautiful trees, I guess it's kind of obvious one would feel the way I described above and choose the title I did, but as I looked at the old stone buildings - the cattle shelter you can see in the foreground and the stable further up ahead on the right - I also realized how fortunate I was.

 

It's hard to imagine now, because Switzerland is one of the wealthiest countries in the world today, but the men and women who had carried these stones and constructed the walls of these buildings were among the poorest in Europe. The hardships the people in some of the remote and little developed valleys in Ticino endured only a few generations ago are unimaginable to most folks living in my country today.

 

It wasn't uncommon that people had to sell their own kids as child slaves - the girls had to work in factories or in rice fields, the boys as "living chimney brushes" in northern Italy - just because there wasn't enough food to support the whole family through the harsh Ticino winters.

 

If you wonder why contemporary Swiss historians speak of "slaves" as opposed to child laborers, it's because that's what many of them actually were: auctioned off for a negotiable prize at the local market, once sold, these kids were not payed and in many cases not even fed by their masters (they had to beg for food in the streets or steal it).

 

Translated from German Wikipedia: ...The Piazza grande in Locarno, where the Locarno Film Festival is held today, was one of the places where orphans, foundlings and children from poor families were auctioned off. The boys were sold as chimney sweeps, the girls ended up in the textile industry, in tobacco processing in Brissago or in the rice fields of Novara, which was also extremely hard work: the girls had to stand bent over in the water for twelve to fourteen hours in all weathers. The last verse of the Italian folk song 'Amore mio non piangere' reads: “Mamma, papà, non piangere, se sono consumata, è stata la risaia che mi ha rovinata” (Mom, dad, don't cry when I'm used up, it was the rice field that destroyed me.)... de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaminfegerkinder

 

The conditions for the chimney sweeps - usually boys between the age of 8 and 12 (or younger, because they had to be small enough to be able to crawl into the chimneys) - were so catastrophic that many of them didn't survive; they died of starvation, cold or soot in their lungs - as well as of work-related accidents like breaking their necks when they fell, or suffocatig if they got stuck in inside a chimney. This practice of "child slavery" went on as late as the 1950s (there's a very short article in English on the topic here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spazzacamini and a more in depth account for German speakers in this brief clip: www.youtube.com/watch?v=gda8vZp_zsc ).

 

Now I don't know if the people who built the old stone houses along my path had to sell any of their kids, but looking at the remnants of their (not so distant) era I felt an immense sense of gratitude that I was born at a time of prosperity - and peace - in my region, my country and my home. Because none of it was my doing: it was simple luck that decided when and where I came into this world.

 

It also made me think of my own family. Both of my grandparents on my father's side grew up in Ticino (they were both born in 1900), but while they eventually left Switzerland's poorest region to live in its richest, the Kanton of Zurich, my grandfather's parents relocated to northern Italy in the 1920s and unfortunately were still there when WWII broke out.

 

They lost everything during the war, and it was their youngest daughter - whom I only knew as "Zia" which means "aunt" in Italian - who earned a little money to support herself and my great-grandparents by giving piano lessons to high-ranking Nazi officers and their kids (this was towards the end of the war when German forces had occupied Italy).

 

I never knew that about her; Zia only very rarely spoke of the war, but one time when I visited her when she was already over a 100 years old (she died at close to 104), I asked her how they had managed to survive, and she told me that she went to the local prefecture nearly every day to teach piano. "And on the way there would be the dangling ones" she said, with a shudder.

 

I didn't get what she meant, so she explained. Visiting the city center where the high ranking military resided meant she had to walk underneath the executed men and women who were hanging from the lantern posts along the road (these executions - often of civilians - were the Germans' retaliations for attacks by the Italian partisans).

 

I never forgot her words - nor could I shake the look on her face as she re-lived this memory. And I still can't grasp it; my house in Ticino is only 60 meters from the Italian border, and the idea that there was a brutal war going on three houses down the road from where I live now in Zia's lifetime strikes me as completely surreal.

 

So, back to my title for the photo above. "Peace". It's such a simple, short word, isn't it? And we use it - or its cousin "peaceful" - quite often when we mean nice and quiet or stress-free. But if I'm honest I don't think I know what it means. My grandaunt Zia did, but I can't know. And I honestly hope I never will.

 

I'm sorry I led you down such a dark road; I usually intend to make people smile with the anecdotes that go with my photos, but this one demanded a different approach (I guess with this latest image I've strayed from the path in more than one sense, and I hope you'll forgive me).

 

Ticino today is the region with the second highest average life expectancy in Europe (85.2 years), and "The Human Development Index" of 0.961 in 2021 was one of the highest found anywhere in the world, and northern Italy isn't far behind. But my neighbors, many of whom are now in their 90s, remember well it wasn't always so.

 

That a region so poor it must have felt like purgatory to many of its inhabitants could turn into something as close to paradise on Earth as I can imagine in a person's lifetime should make us all very hopeful. But, and this is the sad part, it also works the other way 'round. And I believe we'd do well to remember that, too.

 

To all of you - with my usual tardiness but from the bottom of my heart - a happy, healthy, hopeful 2025 and beyond.

People who complain that software engineers build unwieldy, unfriendly and outright mindboggling user interfaces need to look back in history to realize that hardware engineers have not always been much better in that respect. A good place to do that is the Railway Museum in Utrecht, the Netherlands.

Comarca de l'Alcalatén (País Valencià)

Dear Friends, My first slideshows with music www.youtube.com/user/MrPoesy

People in the park

Happy Bench Monday

2J74 Southport to Manchester Oxford Road, formed of 150138 trailing 156428, has deposited a solitary passenger at Hoscar station. In the 2016/17 period the station was the least used station in Lancashire with just 1024 recorded passengers although this was up from 900 in the previous year. There are just 8 services, 4 in each direction, that call at this lonely outpost Monday to Saturday.

Fluidr | Flickr Hive Mind | DNA | Website

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Please add COMMENTS and FAVES. I hope to replicate as soon as possible!!! :)

 

Telle était la devise d'un jeune homme de cent ans que j'ai connu il y a quelques années, à qui je demandais son secret de jeunesse et de vitalité...

Polyommatus icarus or Plebejus argus

Many thanks to alfvet for the ID

 

Counter

www.youtube.com/user/thaicucsinhluongnghi#p/u/17/9XW_EiEbJ2I (CHU Y KI VAO NGUOI DANG LAM SLOWMOTION TRONG CLIP AY LA PIK NGAY) minh khong the nao nhin cuoi hon dk nua khi mot nguoi anh cua minh la popper kha noi tieng ngoai HA NOI lai co the co nhng tro dua nhu the nhi ??? noi that ra thi anh ay la D-MACHINE (du~ng) anh d~ung , có cả anh duy nữa :)) [XL~ MOI NG VI MINH DA PR ANH TRAI MINH WA NHIU ] va minh da hua la he nay se ra HA NOI tham moi ngoi : babyT ; A Duyyyyyyy (OMEGA crew) ; A Duy tu ki (lifestyle crew) va A trai cua minh D-machineeeeeeeeeeee. minh vs a du~ng hoi tra'i nguok . vi minh di theo dances con a di popping nhung noi chung thi 2ae minh deu iu nhay nhay .

* biet dang sau may ong dag dung la ai kg ??? nhung "thien than" va cung la " nhung ng anh" trong nhom GAMEON . sau khoi chup hinh ong ay con loi minh vao tu ki chung :s thoi thi hen a d-machine và anh DUY he nay 2ae minh lam lai nhung tro khi nharrrr . E LUN NHO CAC ANH :* :* :*

OI sao hinh nay minh ki waaaaaaaaaaaa :o

NOTICE

moi nguoi oi minh dang tim partner nen ai co kha nang dances haoc cam nhan minh co the dances thi lien he vs minh nhe

DJ : 01265519383

DJ'S YAHOO : dj_pjkopulu_spank

ok . mog hop tac nherrrrrrrr

www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-ImCpNqbJw

minh rat ghien bai nay :)va say goodbye

moi ngay hay lam wen voi mot nguoi ma ban kg pik , de cuoc song nay luon moi nher

“Any users, found to replicate, reproduce, circulate, distribute, download, manipulate or otherwise use my images without my written consent will be in breach of copyright laws as well as contract laws.”

“The Eye Moment photos by Nolan H. Rhodes”

nrhodesphotos@yahoo.com

www.flickr.com/photos/the_eye_of_the_moment

 

Just a 4 picture series of the Florida setting sun...hope you like them !!

studio9wallart.co.uk/

This image is the copyright of © Neil Holman. Any users, found to replicate, reproduce, circulate, distribute, download, manipulate or otherwise use my images without my written consent will be in breach of copyright laws. Please contact me for permission to use any of my photographs

This Photo Goes to MyCuzn Maramesh i Upload's l3youn'ha *(L)

Umm what i have to say umm i don't have word's to say about you but i will say one word's for you Maryoom" you are the beest :D " i hope soon you have a true LOVE :P< i know you will kill me bcuz i say that :P but what ever :P umm adrey anch ma t3rfeen english 3dell :P but i don't have arabic latter's :P sow it's oky ^^

تدري لوطلبت حياتي عطيتڪ ~

i hope i say all about you true !

i LOVE u MyCuzn''s (L)(L)!!

    

all canon users say HOOORRAAAAAAAAAAAY =P

and yea Nikon - sony - Fuji users =P

too bad u can't say hoooray

 

out of picture

out of ideas =P

and btw. that colorful thing is eatable =P LOOOL i jst did it to take this shot =P

      

Source Mage GNU/Linux users centered over europe 2007 20 Oct 23:37:03 www.sourcemage.org

Taken on 14 April 2016 and uploaded 6 December 2024.

 

A brick with, for British viewers at least, a familiar name. There is a helpful article, published by the Northern Echo, giving a little history of the brick, made by Stanley Brothers and identifying other users of the "trademark" (a manufacturer of bitumen roofing felt and, from 1929, the London Rubber Company). Warning; the Northern Echo page is hopelessly infected with advertisements, all meaningless.

 

There we have it...

 

[DSC_7536e]

Lo-Mob, Blender, Decim8

With dozens of railfans waiting for the CP 150 train to enter the Port of Montreal, a drone user launched his drone nearly at track level (seen just to the left of the lead unit), which seemed dangerously low and was certainly very inconsiderate to the many railfans waiting to shoot this historic train in an unexpected location (the CN Wharf Spur).

July 6, 2024 - North of Funk Nebraska

 

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Watch that afternoon's chase (on Flickr) Click Here (Pt 1)

 

Watch that afternoon's chase (on Flickr) Click Here (Pt 2)

 

Watch that afternoon's chase (on Flickr) Click Here (Pt 3)

 

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stock photography & non exclusive licensing...

 

A vast, dark storm cloud looms over a vibrant, green landscape, creating a dramatic contrast between the sky and the land. The sunlight highlights the edge of the cloud, enhancing the sense of severe weather.

 

*** Please NOTE and RESPECT the Copyright ***

 

Copyright 2024

Dale Kaminski @ NebraskaSC Photography

All Rights Reserved

 

This image may not be copied, reproduced, published or distributed in any medium without the expressed written permission of the copyright holder.

 

#ForeverChasing

#NebraskaSC

   

All right Rserved by me v,v

no one have right to use the pictur !©

 

Spotted Sandpiper, Horsepen Bayou

Nikon D50, Tokina 12-24 ATX Pro @ 24mm, B+W ND1000

no HDR - 2 RAW shot as vertorama

ISO 200, 2,5 sek, f/8

 

Getty Images | Fluidr | Flickr Hive Mind | DNA

 

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © 2010 www.dietrichbojko.com, All rights reserved.

 

Exif data auto added by theGOOD Uploadr

Camera Make : NIKON CORPORATION

Camera Model : NIKON D50

Exposure : 2.500 seconds

Aperture : f/8

ISO Speed : 200

Focal Length : 24 mm

Captured Canon FD 55mm f1.2 lens

They promised clear blue sky today, but the fog wouldn't let go. Not until the very end of the day when we got this magical light :)

 

View large on black

 

Thanks

In and out of Explore, thanks to all for comments and faves :))

 

Use

This photo is Copyrighted 2012 © Morten Prom. All rights reserved.

 

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